Sunday, December 25, 2016

Nepal’s former king has warned that national

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He did not say who he was referring to, but neighbouring India has made clear its displeasure over the federal borders laid out in Nepal’s new constitution, which many believe will disadvantage communities living in the plains with close cultural ties to India.Gyanendra stepped down from the throne in June 2008 after parliament voted to abolish Nepal’s 240-year-old Hindu monarchy, transforming the country into a secular republic. Commentators said the former king, whose reign was not popular, was likely using the current period of political instability in Nepal to reassert his authority.Nepal’s former king has warned that national unity is under attack, making a rare public statement after protests sparked by proposed changes to new federal borders. Gyanendra Shah, the last king of Nepal, was deposed eight years ago following a Maoist revolution and has since largely refrained from public comment on the country’s fractious politics.He broke his silence with a statement late on Wednesday in which he warned of growing divisions between the communities that inhabit the southern plains and the central hill areas of the Himalayan country over suggested changes to internal borders. “Social harmony among Nepali people is waning and efforts are being made to break the bonds of unity between the plains, the hills and the mountains,” Shah said in a statement.Shah accused “temporary powers” who he said were “gaining strength under the influence of outside forces” of creating these divisions.
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